Justin Welby under fire after Church of England's zero-hour contracts revealed

The Archbishop of Canterbury has come under fire after it emerged the Church of England uses zero-hour contracts and invests in Amazon - despite his attacks on both during a speech earlier this week.

Speaking at the TUC Congress in Manchester, Justin Welby referred to zero-hours contracts as "the reincarnation of ancient evil".

It has now been revealed that two Church of England cathedrals are advertising zero-hours contract jobs.

Gloucester Cathedral is currently advertising for a porter on a zero-hours contract to work mostly evening and weekends, with a wage of up to £8.75 per hour, while Norwich Cathedral is on the hunt for a refectory assistant, calling it a "casual zero-hours post" on its website.

In a letter to The Times, the Reverend Ray Anglesea, a United Reformed Church minister who worked on a zero-hours contract in a cathedral bookshop, said the archbishop "might have done well to have put his own house in order before addressing the conference".

He wrote: "What the Most Rev Justin Welby did not disclose was how many of his cathedrals are zero contract hour employers and how many cathedral employees have no job certainty, no sick or holiday pay, and no maternity cover."

The Church of England said advice to its parishes on zero-hours contracts was issued in 2013, and "does not reflect the current thinking" of the Church, adding: "As a responsible employer, the Church of England is now reviewing its working practices."

In his TUC speech, Mr Welby criticised firms like Amazon for paying "almost nothing" in taxes and wrote in a tweet they were a "leech" on the taxpayer.

The Church has since confirmed the online retailer is one of its 20 biggest investments worldwide.

On its investment in Amazon, a spokesman for the church said: "The Church Commissioners have previously been on the record that we consider aggressive tax avoidance or abusive tax arrangements to be both a business risk and an ethical issue. As with other issues, we take the view that it is most effective to be in the room with these companies seeking change as a shareholder.

"We continue to work with other shareholders to tackle this issue via engagement with companies and their managers."

Following the archbishop's speech, Amazon said it paid "all taxes required in the UK and every country where we operate".

'We should all practice what we preach'

Conservative MP, George Freeman, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "It certainly doesn't look good, does it? I think we should all practice what we preach.

"That said, I think the archbishop is right to signal that we should all be careful where we invest our money and in that choice back ethical capitalism.

"He has expressed a lot of concern about the high street and the effect of Amazon. But it looks to me like somebody in the accounts department of the Church of England has dropped the ball."